Geocoastal Research Group

EXPLORING OUR WORLD FROM SOURCE TO SINK

Main Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
    • About Us
  • GRG seminars
  • News & media
  • People
  • Research
    • Coastal geomorphology and morphodynamics #coastalgeos
    • Lake and Estuarine Sediments
    • Coral reefs #GeoReef
    • Deep Marine Sedimentary Systems
    • Paleoclimate and paleoenvironmental change
  • Research facilities
    • GRG Labs
    • GRG Field Gear
    • One Tree Island Research Station
    • Ship Time
  • Publications
  • Student Opportunities
  • Multimedia & Resources
    • Internal GRG
  • Contact

Author Archives: anavilaconcejo

Coastal Sediments in San Diego (USA) and Delft 3D course in Ensenada (Mexico) 2015

June 10, 2015by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

I have recently returned from two weeks overseas. I first went to San Diego (USA) to attend Coastal Sediments 2015. Coastal Sediments is awesome. It happens every 4 years and […]

Read Article →
GRG overseas, Presentations, Research
Prof Jenny Martin giving her talk for "Women at Sydney" on March 2015. Teh slides shows new policies by NHRMC

Women in Science (March 2015)

March 23, 2015by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

Last Thursday I went with Jody to a function organized by “Women at Sydney”. The speaker was Prof Jenny Martin, a very successful scientist who is also an adamant defender […]

Read Article →
GRG and life

The story of Helen the Hydra and the five groovy pirates

December 16, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

I spent the last week on One Tree Island Research Station. A little paradise on Earth. We were a team of five including myself, Steph Duce, Allison Phillips, Tommy Fellowes […]

Read Article →
Field Work, GRG Activities, Research
Allison and Tommy looking into the microscopes searching for foraminifera

Counting Sand

November 21, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

Tommy Fellowes, Allison Phillips and I spent much of our time this semester staring down a microscope in a basement laboratory on the hunt for foraminifera. We have spent hours […]

Read Article →
Research

In case you missed it: women in science

November 19, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

Just over a week ago, National Geographic published a thought-provoking article about the importance of women in science.  They make the case that it is not only about social equality, […]

Read Article →
GRG and life
Mantoloking Bridge, New Jersey connecting to the Ocean County barrier island immediately after Hurricane Sandy (left), and the 100 days after the storm (right). Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/07/16885463-100-days-after-hurricane-sandy-the-jersey-shore-slowly-recovers?lite

New GRG event: ‘Failure to Adapt! The US experience following Hurricane Sandy’

November 11, 2014by anavilaconcejo 1 Comment

‘Failure to Adapt! The US experience following Hurricane Sandy’ Monday 17 November 2014, 6 – 7:30pm History Room S223, The Quadrangle University of Sydney I am happy to announce that […]

Read Article →
GRG Activities

88th ACRS Brisbane: A scientific adventure for Dan and Ana.

August 30, 2014by anavilaconcejo 2 Comments

It has been a great 88th edition of the Australian Coral Reef Symposium in Brisbane. Dan Harris and I went and represented the Geocoastal Research Group and I think that […]

Read Article →
Conferences
Steph Duce showing a coral core underwater in Tahiti

NEW SEMESTER, NEW PEOPLE, NEW PhDs AND OTHER NEWS

August 27, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

This second semester of 2014 we have started in full swing. First of all I would like to welcome all new members of the Geocoastal Research Group: Wellington Trindade is […]

Read Article →
GRG Info

Post navigation

← Previous 1 … 3 4
GRG_Logo_transparentbackground

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,993 other subscribers

Recent Blog Posts

  • Hot off the press! Longest-ever experiment in the Great Barrier Reef on coral skeleton erosion and accretion reveals how reef zones shape long-term reef framework loss
  • IODP Exp. 389 (Hawaiian Drowned Reefs) fully funded PhD position available (University of St Andrews, UK)
  • Hot off the Press! Deep-water Canyon Systems Reshape the Queensland Plateau
  • HOT OFF THE PRESS! Neutron scanning of fossil corals reveals hidden secrets of Earth’s climate history
  • 3 year ARCD funded Postdoctoral Research Associate Position (Coral Reef Systems on the Edge) in the School Geosciences@USYD!
  • IODP Expedition 389 2nd post cruise meeting in Hawaii: coral reefs, coasts and volcanoes.
  • Hot off the Press! How BEBs Are Telling a New Story — Quantifying Their Shape for Better Coastal Management
  • ARCD funded PhD position in the School Geosciences@USYD!
  • Hot off the press! Fossil corals provide clues about sea level rise in a warming world
  • Hot off the press! New constraints on sea-level rise during meltwater pulse 1B from the Great Barrier Reef

Archives

Tags

About Us bathymetry Beach Processes Carbonate Sand climate-change coastalgeos coastal morphodynamics conference coral-sea Coral Reefs education environment Erosion Estuaries Estuarine Beaches field work fledermaus Great Barrier Reef GRG JASAG Large Benthic Foraminifera (LBF) modelling Murray River news One Tree Island Research Station python remote sensing Research projects science Science Communication Sediment transport storms Student opportunities surveying Swell Sydney teaching training waves Women in Science

Latest GRG field campaigns!

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Geocoastal Research Group

School of Geosciences,
Madsen (F09),
The University of Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia
grgusyd@gmail.com
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Geocoastal Research Group
    • Join 147 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Geocoastal Research Group
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...